Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6244406
-
Patent Number
6,244,406
-
Date Filed
Tuesday, November 23, 199925 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, June 12, 200123 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Marmor; Charles A
- Rodriquez; Saul
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 192 6982
- 192 698
- 192 69
- 192 661
- 192 108
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A drive clutch for connecting a drive shaft (12) with an exchangeable cylinder (10) of a printing machine, such that, at one end of the cylinder (10), a locking part (24) is provided and that, in or on the drive shaft, a spanner (32) is disposed, which has a recess (38), which opens up radially and into which the locking part (24) can be introduced positively, and that the spanner (32) can be retracted axially, in order to pull the cylinder (10) with the help of the locking part (24) against the end of the drive shaft (12).
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a drive clutch for connecting a drive shaft with an exchangeable cylinder of a printing machine.
It is frequently necessary to exchange cylindrical, rotatable elements, such as printing cylinders, inking rollers and the like of printing machines. These exchangeable, cylindrical elements are referred to in an abbreviated fashion in this application as “cylinders”.
Robots are known, with which the generally relatively heavy cylinders can be lifted out of their bearings in the machine frame after the appropriate cap pieces of the bearing have been opened or removed. If the cylinders are driven over mutually meshing gearwheels, the engagement of the teeth is cancelled automatically when the cylinder is lifted out of its bearings. Recently, however, driving systems are increasingly being used, for which the cylinders and rollers of a printing machine, instead of being driven by gearwheel transmissions synchronously with the help of a single driving motor, are driven by a separate driving motor, which is provided for each cylinder and which is seated directly on a drive shaft connected coaxially with the cylinder in question.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is the object of the invention to provide a drive clutch which, on the one hand, permits the cylinder to be driven precisely directly and, on the other, to be exchanged easily.
Pursuant to the invention, this objective is accomplished owing to the fact that a locking part is provided at one end of the cylinder and that, in or on the drive shaft, a spanner is disposed, which has a radially opening recess, into which the locking part can be introduced positively, and that the spanner can be retracted axially, in order to pull the cylinder with the help of the locking part against one end of the drive shaft.
During the operation of the printing machine, the cylinder is tensioned axially with the help of the spanner against the end of the drive shaft, so that a positive or preferably predominantly frictional connection between the drive shaft and the cylinder is created. For exchanging the cylinder, the spanner is moved into a release position, in which the locking part can radially leave the recess of the spanner. Accordingly, the cylinder can be uncoupled from the drive shaft in a very simple manner, in that it is moved, with the help of the robot, radially in the direction, in which the recess of the spanner opens up. By reversing this course of motion, the new cylinder with its locking part can be introduced into the spanner and then, by retracting the spanner, tensioned once again against the end of the drive shaft, so that the driving connection is restored.
The inventive drive clutch is intended, particularly for printing machines, in which, although the cylinder is driven over the drive shaft, which is connected coaxially with the cylinder, the cylinder itself is directly supported in the machine frame. Since the bearings in this case have a relatively large diameter, the drive clutch, which naturally must have a certain minimum diameter, can adjoin the bearing site of the cylinder directly or even mesh somewhat with the end face of the cylinder, so that a very small construction is achieved. Moreover, it proves to be advantageous that the cylinder is stressed by the drive clutch axially with the drive shaft. The clutch therefore behaves in a stiff manner in the axial direction and in the direction of rotation, so that the side register and the longitudinal register can be adjusted precisely. On the other hand, in the radial direction, the clutch can be somewhat elastic. This has the advantage that the axis of rotation of the cylinder is defined precisely by the mounting in the machine frame and a slight eccentricity in the drive shaft, resulting from installation inaccuracies, can be compensated, as also described in the European patent application 98 121 059 of the applicant.
Preferably, the mutual facing ends of the cylinder and of the drive shaft together form a friction clutch which, in a particularly preferred embodiment, is combined with a positively meshing clutch, especially a single tooth clutch. In this case, the single tooth clutch serves to hold the cylinder in a defined angular position in relation to the drive shaft, so that the longitudinal register can be adjusted with the help of an angle sensing device, which is disposed at the drive shaft or directly at the motor. However, the driving torque is transferred mainly by the friction clutch.
Preferably, the spanner is tensioned elastically in the clamped position and can be moved into the release position with the help of an actuating rod extending axially through the hollow drive shaft. When the drive shaft is connected coaxially with the motor shaft or formed in one piece with the latter, the actuating rod can extend through the whole of the motor and optionally also through the angle sensing device. For loosening the clutch, the free end of the actuating rod can then be acted upon by a tappet, which is actuated pneumatically or hydraulically and does not need to participate in the rotation of the drive shaft.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
In the following, an example of the invention is explained in greater detail by means of the drawing, in which
FIG. 1
shows an axial section through the end of a cylinder of a printing machine
FIG. 2
shows a section in the plane II—II in
FIG. 1
,
FIG. 3
shows an axial section through a drive clutch,
FIG. 4
shows an end view of the drive clutch,
FIG. 5
shows the drive clutch of
FIG. 3
during the connection of the cylinder of FIG.
1
and
FIG. 6
shows the drive clutch and the end of the cylinder in the connected state.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
In
FIG. 1
, one end of a cylinder
10
, for example, a printing cylinder or an inking roller of a printing machine is shown, which is to be connected to a drive shaft
12
with the help of the drive clutch shown in FIG.
3
. An end section of the cylinder
10
, shown in section in
FIG. 1
, forms a bearing surface
14
and serves to mount the end of the cylinder
10
in question in a bearing
16
(FIG.
3
), which is disposed in a frame of the printing machine that is not shown.
On the front side of the cylinder
10
, adjoining the bearing surface
16
, a friction ring
18
is disposed, which is interrupted at one place on its periphery by a protruding coupling tooth
20
.
A cylindrical extension
22
protruding coaxially from the end of the cylinder
10
carries at the free end a locking part
24
which, as can be recognized in
FIG. 2
, is in the shape of a circular disk.
The drive shaft
12
, shown in
FIG. 3
, carries at its end, facing the bearing
16
, a friction ring
26
which, when the cylinder
10
is connected, forms a friction clutch together with the friction ring
18
of the cylinder. The friction ring
26
is interrupted at one place on its periphery by a notch
28
, which can be engaged by and accurately fits the coupling tooth
20
so that, in the connected state, the angular position of the cylinder
10
is fixed precisely in relation to the angular position of the drive shaft
12
.
The drive shaft
12
is constructed as a hollow shaft, through which a continuous actuating rod
30
passes axially. At the end of the actuating rod
30
, a spanner
32
is fastened, which can be shifted with the help of the actuating rod
30
axially into an end section of the drive shaft
12
. The spanner is fixed by a bolt
34
, which engages a longitudinal groove
36
of the spanner, so that it cannot rotate in the drive shaft
12
. The spanner
32
has a recess
38
, which is U-shaped in cross section and opens radially in the direction of the notch
28
, that is, towards the top in
FIGS. 3 and 4
. The recess
38
is bounded at the free end of the spanner by a front wall
40
, in which a U-shaped slot
42
, which also opens in the upwards direction, is formed.
At its end, opposite the spanner
32
, the actuating rod
30
has a plate
44
and is tensioned towards the left in
FIG. 3
by a spring
46
, so that it has the tendency to retract the spanner
32
into the interior of the drive shaft
12
. In the state shown in
FIG. 3
, the plate
44
is held by a pneumatically or hydraulically actuated tappet
48
against the force of the spring
46
in a position, in which the spanner
32
protrudes out of the open end of the drive shaft
12
. When in this state, the cylinder
10
is placed with the help of a robot, which is not shown, from above into the bearing
16
, the locking part
24
enters the recess
38
and the extension
22
is placed in the slot
42
of the front wall
40
. This state is shown in FIG.
5
.
Subsequently, the tappet
48
is retracted, so that the spring
46
is relieved and shifts the actuating rod
30
and the spanner
32
towards the left. At the same time, the locking part
24
is taken hold of by the front wall
40
of the spanner
32
and the cylinder
10
is pulled axially in the bearing
16
against the end of the drive shaft
12
, so that the friction rings
26
and
18
are brought into firm frictional contact with one another, as shown in FIG.
6
. At the same time, the coupling tooth
20
enters the corresponding notch
28
. In this way, a connection, rigid in the axial direction and in the peripheral direction, is established between the drive shaft
12
and the cylinder
10
.
The drive shaft
12
, of which only the respective end sections are shown in the drawing, can at the same time form the rotor of a driving motor, which is not shown, so that the drive shaft
12
and also the actuating rod
30
pass axially through the housing of this driving motor. In addition, the drive shaft
12
can also engage a mechanism (not shown) for adjusting the side register, and an angle sensing device for measuring the angular position of the cylinder
10
can be integrated in the motor for adjusting the longitudinal register. All adjustment motions for adjusting the longitudinal register and the side register are transferred by the inventive drive clutch free from backlash to the cylinder
10
.
After the cylinder
10
has been coupled to the drive shaft
12
in this manner, the bearing
16
is closed with the help of a bearing cover
50
. The axis of rotation of the cylinder
10
is then defined precisely by the bearing
16
, which is attached to the frame. If a slight eccentricity develops between the drive shaft
12
and the cylinder
10
as a result of dimensional tolerances during the manufacture or installation of the motor housing, this eccentricity can be compensated for owing to the fact that the friction rings
26
and
18
work radially somewhat against one another. The coupling tooth
20
also engages free from backlash only in the peripheral direction; however, in the radial direction, it engages the associated notch of the drive shaft with backlash. In this way, the transfer of radial forces and/or bending moments to the cylinder
10
is prevented.
When the cylinder
10
is to be exchanged, the bearing cover
50
is opened or removed and the actuating rod
30
is shifted with the help of the tappet
48
once again into the release position. At the same time, the end wall
40
of the spanner
32
can engage the end surface of the cylinder
10
and shift the cylinder into an axial position, in which the locking part
24
lies outside of the drive shaft
12
, so that the cylinder
10
, with the help of a robot, can be lifted upward out of the bearing
16
.
Claims
- 1. An assembly in a printing machine, comprising:an exchangeable cylinder; a drive shaft; and a drive clutch for connecting the drive shaft with the exchangeable cylinder, said drive clutch including: a locking part at one end of the cylinder, said locking part including an extension that protrudes from said one end of the cylinder, and a spanner disposed in or on the drive shaft, the spanner having a recess which opens up radially and into which the locking part can be introduced positively, and the spanner being axially retractable, in order to pull the cylinder with the help of the locking part against an end of the drive shaft.
- 2. The assembly of claim 1, wherein:the drive shaft is a hollow shaft, and the spanner is guided axially displaceable and non-rotationally in the drive shaft.
- 3. The assembly of claim 2, further comprising an actuating rod connected with the spanner and which passes through the drive shaft and emerges from the drive shaft at an end opposite to the cylinder.
- 4. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the spanner is stressed elastically in a retracted position and can be shifted counter to a pre-stressed force into a position, which enables the locking part to be introduced into the spanner.
- 5. The assembly of claim 3, further comprising a tappet which acts upon the end of the actuating rod emerging from the drive shaft.
- 6. The assembly of claim 1, wherein mutually pre-stressed ends of the cylinder and the drive shaft form a friction clutch.
- 7. The assembly of claim 1, wherein mutually pre-stressed ends of the cylinder and the drive shaft form a single tooth coupling with one another.
- 8. The assembly of claim 7, wherein the recess of the spanner opens radially in a direction of the single tooth coupling.
- 9. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the spanner has an end wall which forms a boundary of the recess and is constructed to push the cylinder axially away from the drive shaft, when the spanner is extended.
- 10. The assembly of claim 1, wherein said one end of the cylinder at which the locking part is formed, forms at an outer periphery thereof a bearing surface, with which the cylinder is mounted in a bearing attached to a frame.
- 11. The assembly of claim 2, wherein the spanner is stressed elastically in a retracted position and can be shifted counter to a pre-stressed force into a position, which enables the locking part to be introduced into the spanner.
- 12. The assembly of claim 3, wherein the spanner is stressed elastically in a retracted position and can be shifted counter to a pre-stressed force into a position, which enables the locking part to be introduced into the spanner.
- 13. The assembly of claim 12, further comprising a tappet which acts upon the end of the actuating rod emerging from the drive shaft.
- 14. The assembly of claim 2, wherein mutually pre-stressed ends of the cylinder and the drive shaft form a friction clutch.
- 15. The assembly of claim 3, wherein mutually pre-stressed ends of the cylinder and the drive shaft form a friction clutch.
- 16. The assembly of claim 4, wherein mutually pre-stressed ends of the cylinder and the drive shaft form a friction clutch.
- 17. The assembly of claim 5, wherein mutually pre-stressed ends of the cylinder and the drive shaft form a friction clutch.
- 18. The assembly of claim 2, wherein mutually pre-stressed ends of the cylinder and the drive shaft form a single tooth coupling with one another.
- 19. The assembly of claim 2, wherein the spanner has an end wall which forms a boundary of the recess and is constructed to push the cylinder axially away from the drive shaft, when the spanner is extended.
- 20. The assembly of claim 2, wherein said one end of the cylinder at which the locking part is formed, forms at an outer periphery thereof a bearing surface, with which the cylinder is mounted in a bearing attached to a frame.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
98122821 |
Jan 1998 |
EP |
|
US Referenced Citations (5)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
0713023 |
May 1996 |
EP |